This blog is an on-going report of my frequent adventures and observations as a physics groupie living in Los Angeles. I regularly seek out Curious Characters à la Richard Feynman along the path towards greater understanding of mathematics and science. My goal is to show you that a life in science can be exciting, rewarding, and down right scintillating. Teachers and children are particularly welcome!

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

WMAP Goes to Sleep

Certainly near the top of the list of scientific instruments that have changed mankind’s view of the cosmos is NASA’s Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP). In September 2010, the spacecraft fired its boosters for the last time and curved into a final orbit around the Sun where it will remain as a permanent fixture in the universe it helped to interpret.

WMAP was launched on June 2001 to revolutionize the field of cosmology. WMAP studied the remnants of heat that lingered after the Big Bang, a pattern frozen in time from when the universe was only about 380,000 years old. The light arriving to WMAP from this great distance has since stretched to microwave wavelengths. Subtle differences observed in the texture of this so-called “cosmic microwave background” have revealed the geometry, composition and age of the universe. The probe showed that the universe is flat, and most likely endless. It also yielded the first full-sky map of the cosmic microwave background (see inset image). Other results included how this primeval light is polarized and forms the blueprint for the first galaxy formation.

During its illustrious mission, WMAP science has been extremely fertile. Its findings produced some of the most highly cited papers in physics. And although WMAP science has come to a conclusion, its replacement is already in orbit: the European Space Agency’s Planck satellite.

When science journalist Simon Singh pointed out thatthe lyrics did not reflect current scientific knowledge (WMAP determined the age of the universe with great accuracy), Melua agreed to re-record the song:

“We are 13.7 billion light years from the edge of the observable universe

That’s a good estimate with well-defined error bars
And with available information”

Listen to the before and after version here. Now that is one scientifically responsible artist!

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About the Physics Groupie

I am an independent researcher in gravitational wave astrophysics. I'm also an award winning science writer. I have adopted a science lifestyle and it has been a very enjoyable metamorphosis with many curious turns along the way. I spend a great deal of my time with my chosen areas of science and I'm having a lot of fun. Would you like to have fun with science too? If so, then feel free to tag along with me on my journey of understanding the natural world around us. In the photo I'm seen in the LIGO control room (Hanford, WA). I welcome all comments: ddgutierrez@alumni.ucla.edu